Literary usage of Creeping fern

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1.Floral Decorations for the Dwelling House: A Practical Guide to the Home by Annie Hassard (1876)"In Top Trumpet:—The same, with the addition of creeping fern. TRUMPET VASE.
Tazza:—White Water Lilies, pink Christine Geranium, white and pink Rhodanthe, ..."

2.Recollections of a Happy Life: Being the Autobiography of Marianne North by Marianne North (1892)"There were tall trees above, which seemed to have long fern-like leaves also
hanging from them, when really it was only a large creeping fern which had ..."

3.The Plant World by Plant World Association, Wild Flower Preservation Society (U.S.), Wild Flower Preservation Society of America (1903)"work, or structure, on the land of another, or shall wilfully cut, destroy, or
take away from the land of another, any creeping fern, crops, shrub, ..."

5.Our Ferns in Their Haunts: A Guide to All the Native Species by Willard Nelson Clute (1901)"This species is also called creeping fern, snake-tongue fern, Hartford fern and
Windsor fern, the last two names referring to localities where it was once ..."

6.Floral Decorations for the Dwelling House: A Practical Guide to the Home by Annie Hassard (1876)"In Top Trumpet:—The same, with the addition of creeping fern. TRUMPET VASE.
Tazza:—White Water Lilies, pink Christine Geranium, white and pink Rhodanthe, ..."

7.Recollections of a Happy Life: Being the Autobiography of Marianne North by Marianne North (1892)"There were tall trees above, which seemed to have long fern-like leaves also
hanging from them, when really it was only a large creeping fern which had ..."

8.The Plant World by Plant World Association, Wild Flower Preservation Society (U.S.), Wild Flower Preservation Society of America (1903)"work, or structure, on the land of another, or shall wilfully cut, destroy, or
take away from the land of another, any creeping fern, crops, shrub, ..."

10.Our Ferns in Their Haunts: A Guide to All the Native Species by Willard Nelson Clute (1901)"This species is also called creeping fern, snake-tongue fern, Hartford fern and
Windsor fern, the last two names referring to localities where it was once ..."